A painting titled The Other – Inner emotions in Sattvika Abhinaya of a woman cloistered remained popular with guests.
“You know there is a sad woman behind that shawl. The projection is exquisite,” said a visitor, Mrs Saeed Qadir.
“She seems completed shrouded in grief,” said another visitor, Tehmeena Adeeb.
Sacred Conversation was another painting that was very liked by visitors in which, amid the sober colours of a shawl, the splashes of bright yellow and vivid blues and emerald greens abound in the wings of the two birds.
Shakil Saigol described himself as a servant of the arts.
“Dance has always been an obsession of mine and music has been in my psyche for a long time,” he said at the event.
The artist also talked about his fascination with shawls.
“My wife and I have a huge collection which was handed down to us by our mothers and we go to great lengths to find exquisite shawls,” he said.
“I cannot recall a time when I was not painting. In this body of works, the jamawar shawls provide the backdrop to the surrealistic forms.
“The messages in my subjects vary but the elements which run through a range of series are consistent. In painting the human form, textiles, foliage and sculpture, my inclination towards surrealism often emerges,” he said.
The show will continue till April 11.
Published in Dawn, March 30th, 2018